4.8 Article

PTEN inhibits AMPK to control collective migration

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-31842-y

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Funding

  1. French National Research Agency (France BioImaging) [ANR-10-INBS-04]
  2. Ecole Doctorale ED515 (Complexite du Vivant)
  3. Fondation TOURRE
  4. Fondation ARC pour la Recherche contre le Cancer

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Loss of PTEN promotes cell migration while targeting AMPK activity can counteract this effect. This suggests the important regulatory roles of PTEN and AMPK in tumor invasion and provides new therapeutic opportunities for glioblastoma.
Pten is a tumour suppressor gene that is associated with highly invasive cancers such as glioblastoma. Here the authors show that PTEN loss results in increased migratory behaviour, which can be countered by targeting AMPK activity. Pten is one of the most frequently mutated tumour suppressor gene in cancer. PTEN is generally altered in invasive cancers such as glioblastomas, but its function in collective cell migration and invasion is not fully characterised. Herein, we report that the loss of PTEN increases cell speed during collective migration of non-tumourous cells both in vitro and in vivo. We further show that loss of PTEN promotes LKB1-dependent phosphorylation and activation of the major metabolic regulator AMPK. In turn AMPK increases VASP phosphorylation, reduces VASP localisation at cell-cell junctions and decreases the interjunctional transverse actin arcs at the leading front, provoking a weakening of cell-cell contacts and increasing migration speed. Targeting AMPK activity not only slows down PTEN-depleted cells, it also limits PTEN-null glioblastoma cell invasion, opening new opportunities to treat glioblastoma lethal invasiveness.

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